[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 173 (Tuesday, December 1, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8217-S8218]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBAMACARE
Mrs. CAPITO. Mr. President, I wish to address ObamaCare repeal. As I
was thinking about what I was going to say today, I went back and
looked at a speech I made on the House of Representatives floor on
March 21, 2010. The previous speaker talked about the partisanship that
she perceives now. I thought it interesting. I am going to read just a
couple quotes from my speech then: ``[We are thinking about] this bill
as a blanket, a blanket of health care legislation that may be draped
across America and its population in the coming years,'' which it has
for the last 4 years. I talk about how ``its cloth has been cut behind
closed doors and its color is tinged by partisan hands.'' That is the
ObamaCare legislation and the ObamaCare plan we have today. ``The huge
holes will not protect the cold winds of job loss, new taxes,
government bureaucracy, and increased health care costs. . . . All of
America will feel the weight of this uncomfortable burden.'' Those were
my words on March 21, 2010, in the House of Representatives.
Today and later this week, the Senate will consider a bill to repeal
that bill, ObamaCare, a costly disaster that 4 years--5 years later we
see has cost countless people access to their doctors, access to the
health care plan of their choice, and thousands of West Virginians from
my State have lost or had to change their coverage. We ought to ask the
individuals and families whose premiums and deductibles have
skyrocketed and the small businesses that have been forced to cut hours
and employees.
Let's consider the exchanges that are folding and the hospitals that
are facing unmanageable costs. Even the Nation's largest health
insurance provider has threatened to pull out of ObamaCare, citing high
costs and growing risks. Just today, the CEO of that company said that
joining ObamaCare was ``a bad decision.''
There has to be a better way, and we need to find it.
In the bill we are considering this week, the Senate will do two
major things: It will repeal significant portions of the health care
law that are not working. It will also provide a bridge to replace this
law with an improved health care system. This ObamaCare repeal bill
will eliminate enforcement of the individual and employer mandates. It
will repeal $1 trillion--$1 trillion--in onerous taxes. It will save
and strengthen Medicare. It will also dedicate resources to fight the
growing drug epidemic that is sweeping across this country. Certainly
in our
[[Page S8218]]
State of West Virginia we have had many difficulties, as many of our
fellow Americans have.
ObamaCare has upended our health care system and has broken many of
the President's own promises. Headline after headline in recent weeks
has called attention to the increasing premiums Americans will face
next year. Across the Nation, rates for one out of every three
ObamaCare plans will double in the year 2016.
For plans that are not seeing huge premium increases, rising
deductibles are placing an excessive burden on patients--but not just
on patients; let's think about our health care providers, our
hospitals, for example. When a patient has a high deductible and comes
in for an expensive surgery, that patient has to pay a $4,000 or $5,000
deductible. That is unaffordable for a lot of people, and that hospital
is stuck with that bill.
The situation in my State is even worse. West Virginia is the only
State in the country with only one insurer participating on the
exchange. Remember, the President promised us choice and the ability to
make decisions for ourselves. We have one choice in West Virginia.
Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield has been the only company in the West
Virginia exchange through the first 2 years of ObamaCare, and we
recently learned that it almost pulled out of the exchange for 2016.
That would have been disastrous for our constituents. And why are they
pulling out? Because they are losing millions of dollars on a health
care plan that was promised to be a blanket, to blanket all of us, as I
said in the speech I gave in 2010. It has turned out to be a blanket
with huge holes.
With only one provider, choices and accesses are already limited, but
for many Americans, the exchanges set up under ObamaCare have become
their only option. Because of increasing costs, many are now unable to
afford the health insurance without subsidies.
While Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield--the exchange insurance in West
Virginia--did remain in West Virginia, premiums are set to increase
this year or next year by 24 percent. These increases are well beyond
the financial reach of most West Virginians. Our unemployment in West
Virginia has skyrocketed because of the President's energy policies,
and now we are looking at hard-working West Virginians and telling them
their health care that was supposed to be affordable and accessible is
going up 24 percent. That is unconscionable.
As one of my constituents pointed out, ``This represents a
significant challenge to our family budget as my husband's pay has not
increased at the rate that our health care costs continue to rise.''
What about ObamaCare's promise to lower the cost of health care? The
reality is really quite different.
As another West Virginian put it, ``The law remains a failure by the
administration's own metrics, and its harmful impact continues to make
life more difficult for millions across the country.''
By repealing ObamaCare, we can revisit the problems caused by the
health care law and the problems that existed before, replace them with
reforms that work, and protect those whose coverage has been disrupted.
In order to ensure individuals do not lose access to current
coverage, this ObamaCare repeal bill will provide a 2-year transition
period. This period will give us time to enact alternative reforms that
will provide access to quality, affordable care without disrupting
coverage. Health care reform should give States and individuals
choice--remember, in my State we don't have a choice; we have one
provider, no choice--while reducing health care costs over the long
term. Premiums are going up 24 percent, and deductibles are
skyrocketing. That is not containing costs over the long term.
Americans deserve a health care system that works for them, and we
know ObamaCare is not it. There is a better way.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, am I correct that we are in morning
business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
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